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Ranbir advised that hardwork will eventually pay-off: Alia on dealing with Kalank failure

Alia Bhatt said when Kalank tanked at the box office, she was heartbroken that her hardwork didn't pay-off immediately, but an advice from actor-boyfriend Ranbir Kapoor helped change her perspective.

Kalank was an ambitious period drama starring Alia, Varun Dhawan, Madhuri Dixit-Nene, Sanjay Dutt, Sonakshi Sinha, Aditya Roy Kapoor and Kunal Kemmu.


Alia was in conversation with filmmaker Karan Johar at the Jio MAMI Movie Mela with Star, 2019, where the the director asked the actor on how she dealt with the failure of the film.

"Strangely, I was really okay the day it happened. I had seen the film a day before and I knew in my head what was going to happen. Though I didn't think it will be going to be hit by a truck. Later on when I thought about it, what really broke my heart was that I always in my head had this idea that if you work really hard, it'll always pay-off. But it didn't. That felt scary."

The actor said she was talking to Ranbir who gave her an advise which "made a lot of sense" to her.

"He said, you put in the hardwork, it doesn't have to pay-off immediately. It'll pay off in your life, someday. That's what it means to be a hardworking actor or a person. Someday the goodness will come to you in another film.

"My job is to put in the hardwork. I believed in the film, it didn't pan out the way we wanted to, I felt bad about it for a few days but I had to focus on my next."

Alia will next be seen in Sadak 2, directed by her father, filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt.

Sequel to the 1991 film Sadak, the film also stars Dutt, Pooja Bhatt, and Aditya.

The 26-year-old actor said she often wonders if she has managed to develop the director-actor relationship with Mahesh Bhatt "or is it still that he's my father?"

"I am still confused and I think by the end of the film I will realise what was our director-actor relationship. But he is an absolute delight to work with. Its unbelievable how clear he is. His energy transcends all of us. He could be having high fever but he just doesn't stop. He is so generous with actors.

"He doesn't sit behind the monitor. He's just behind the camera, near the actors. I was doing an emotional scene and I didn't plan to cry but I just started crying. He started crying while I was and I felt him cry and I broke out of the moment for a second and was like 'that's my dad crying, I cant see him cry' and I started crying even more!" she added.

Alia said the experience of working on the film made her connect with her father more and that's her biggest takeaway from Sadak 2.

"This is that one film I don't care about the outcome. The joy that I had to be connected with my father, to work with him, he's like a new born baby on set. It's just amazing," she added.

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Arijit Singh reveals the painful process behind creating his signature voice

Highlights

  • Arijit Singh once said audiences initially rejected his voice
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  • Arijit rose to fame with Tum Hi Ho in 2013 and announced his retirement from playback singing earlier this year

Today, Arijit Singh is widely regarded as one of Bollywood’s most recognisable voices. But before songs such as Tum Hi Ho made him a household name, the singer says his voice was far from universally accepted.

As Arijit celebrates his birthday on 25 April, an older interview has resurfaced in which he spoke candidly about the pressure he faced early in his career and the extreme lengths he went to in order to transform his sound.

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